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But here's a question that keeps scholars and mystics up at night: If the Sefirot are how we perceive God, are they truly God? Are they intrinsic to the Divine, or something else e...
That feeling, that yearning, might be closer to the truth than you think. In Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, we talk about the Sefirot (סְפִירוֹת), often translated as ema...
That feeling resonates deeply when we delve into the Kabbalistic concept of Tzimtzum, the primordial contraction. Before creation, there was only Ein Sof, the Infinite. But how cou...
Jewish mysticism grapples with this very feeling in its exploration of creation, specifically with a concept called the Reshimu, or "Residue." Imagine a vast, boundless light—the E...
And Jewish mystical tradition, specifically the Kabbalah, offers a rather intriguing answer. It all starts with the Sefirot (singular: Sefirah) – those ten divine emanations, or at...
And in the rich tapestry of Jewish mystical thought, specifically in texts like the Kalach Pitchei Chokhmah, we find some truly fascinating answers. One might ask: if the lower rea...
We often think of gravity, or love, or maybe even duct tape. But in Kabbalah, the mystical heart of Judaism, there's a concept that's even more fundamental: Malchut. Malchut – that...
The Tzimtzum (צמצום)—that primordial act of contraction, the cosmic exhale where God, the Eyn Sof (אין סוף, "the Infinite"), withdrew to create space for creation—is at the heart o...
It's a journey into the heart of creation itself. One of the central ideas is Tzimtzum (צמצום), often translated as "contraction" or "withdrawal." It describes how God, who is infi...